Veritas™ System Recovery 18 Service Pack 3 Management Solution Administrator's Guide
- Introducing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Installing Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- Getting started with Veritas System Recovery Management Solution
- About managing recovery point destinations
- About viewing filters
- About organizational views
- About managing Veritas System Recovery license policies
- Managing backups
- About backup policies
- Creating a basic backup policy
- Creating an advanced backup policy
- Managing recovery points
- Managing the conversion of recovery points to virtual disks
- Managing Cloud Storage
- Remote recovery of drives and computers
- Local recovery of files, folders, drives, and computers
- About recovering lost data locally
- Starting a computer locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Recovering files and folders locally by using Veritas System Recovery Disk
- About using the networking tools in Veritas System Recovery Disk
- Monitoring computers and processes
- Appendix A. About backing up databases
- Appendix B. About Active Directory
- Appendix C. Backing up Microsoft virtual environments
- Appendix D. About Veritas System Recovery 18 Management Solution and Windows Server 2008 Core
Recovering a drive
To remotely recover a data drive, a current recovery point that includes the drive to be recovered must already exist. When the recovery is finished, the computer is restarted automatically.
In some cases, the remote drive cannot be locked to perform the recovery under Windows. This issue may occur because the drive is in use by a program. In such cases, the Veritas Recovery Environment is started to complete the recovery.
LightsOut Restore must already be installed on the client computer if you intend to recover a system drive. If LightsOut Restore is not installed on the client computer, you cannot save the Recover Drive task.
See Setting up and using LightsOut Restore.
Note:
Before you proceed, you may want to inform the user of the client computer. The user should close any applications and files that may be running or open on the drive that you want to recover.
Warning:
When you recover a drive, all the existing data on the drive is overwritten with the data that is found in the recovery point. Any changes that you made to the data on a drive, after the date of the recovery point you use to recover, are lost. For example, if you created a new word-processing file on the drive after you created the recovery point, the new word-processing file is not recovered.
See Recovering a remote computer.
To configure a remote Recover Drive task from the Monitor Tasks tab
- Instruct the user of the client computer to close any applications and files that may be running or open on the drive to recover.
- On the Veritas System Recovery 18 Management Solution Monitor Tasks tab, right-click Veritas System Recovery Tasks, and then click New > Task.
- In the Client Tasks tree, click Veritas System Recovery Tasks > Recover Drive.
- In the right pane of the Create New Task page, type a name for the task.
- On the drop-down list, select a computer whose drive you want to recover.
- Do one of the following:
Click View recovery points of the selected managed client computer.
Click View recovery points of all managed client computers.
- Optionally, click Display recovery points from local and network offsite locations.
This option only applies if you use an Offsite Copy destination within a backup policy or you have configured a dedicated Offsite Copy location.
See About Offsite Copy.
- Select a recovery point that you want to restore.
- If the recovery point is password-protected, enter the correct password in the text field.
- Click Advanced.
- On the Select Destination tab, select the drive that you want to restore.
If the drive does not have enough space available to restore a recovery point, select multiple, contiguous destinations on the same hard disk.
- On the Options tab, set the restore options.
Ignore recovery point corruption during recovery (potential data loss)
Automatically excludes the corrupted data and continues to restore the recovery point. The restored data does not contain the corrupted portion of data.
Note:
There may be potential data loss as corrupted data is excluded from restore.
The Ignore recovery point corruption during recovery (potential data loss) option is only available from Symantec System Recovery 2013 R2 (version 11.1.5 and later). For the earlier versions of Symantec System Recovery 2013 R2, if you select this option, the Do not verify recovery point before recovery option is applied.
Verify recovery point before recovery
Determines whether a recovery point is valid or corrupt before it is recovered. If the recovery point is corrupt, the recovery process is discontinued. This option significantly increases the time that is required for the recovery to complete. However, it ensures that the recovery point being restored is valid.
Do not verify recovery point before recovery
Does not verify whether a recovery point is valid or corrupt before it is recovered. During recovery, if there is corrupted data on the recovery point, an error message is displayed and you cannot recover the recovery point.
Check for file system errors
Checks the recovered drive for errors after the recovery point is restored.
Resize restored drive
Expands the drive to occupy the target drive's unallocated space.
Set drive active (for booting OS)
Makes the recovered drive the active partition (the drive the client computer starts from). Only one drive can be active at a time. If you recover a secondary drive, do not check this option. (A secondary drive is a drive other than the one where the Windows operating system is installed.)
Restore original disk signature
Restores the original, physical disk signature of the hard drive.
Disk signatures are part of all Windows operating systems that Veritas System Recovery supports. Disk signatures are required to use the hard drive.
Select this option if either of the following situations are true:
A computer's drive letters are atypical (for example, assigned letters other than C, D, E, and so forth).
You restore a recovery point to a blank hard drive.
Partition type
Includes the following options:
Primary partition
Because hard disks are limited to four primary partitions, select this type if the drive has four or fewer partitions.
Logical partition
Select this type if you need more than four partitions. You can have up to three primary partitions, plus any number of logical partitions, up to the maximum size of the hard disk.
Drive letter
Assigns a drive letter to the partition.
- Click OK to return to the Create New Task page.
- Click OK.
- In the Task Status field, do one of the following:
To run the task as soon as possible, click Now, and then click Schedule.
To schedule the task to run at a later date and time, click Schedule. Specify the date and time to run the task, and then click Schedule at the bottom of the page.
Double-click the description in the Task Status table to review a detailed summary of the task's progress.